Jovian Planet Systemsn00006757/astronomylectures/ECP4e/08... · Tidal stresses crack Europa’s...

Post on 07-Oct-2020

7 views 0 download

Transcript of Jovian Planet Systemsn00006757/astronomylectures/ECP4e/08... · Tidal stresses crack Europa’s...

Chapter 8

Jovian Planet Systems

How do jovian planets differ from terrestrials?

• They are much larger than terrestrial planets

• They do not have solid surfaces

• The things they are made of are quite different

• Terrestrial planets are made principally of rock and metal

• Jovian planets are not…

How do jovian planets differ from terrestrials?

• Composition of Jupiter and Saturn

– Mostly H and He

– “Gas giants”

• Composition of Uranus and Neptune

– Mostly hydrogen compounds: water (H2O), methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3)

– Some H, He, and rock

– “Ice giants”

• So why are the jovian planets different from terrestrials?

• And why are the gas giants different from the ice giants?

• Two reasons: Location Timing

The difference between jovian and terrestrial planets

• LOCATION is the reason for the differences between jovians and terrestrials

• Remember the frost line?

• The jovian planets formed beyond it, where planetesimals could accumulate ICE

(solid hydrogen compounds) as well as rock and metal

• So the jovian cores grew much larger than terrestrial cores…

• …and could therefore attract and retain H and He from the surrounding nebula

The difference between gas giants and ice giants

• Gas giants and ice giants are different mainly in how much H and He they contain

• Both LOCATION and TIMING are reasonable explanations for that

LOCATION

• planets forming in denser nebula will start forming their cores first…

• …and they will have more material to work with and thus grow faster…

• …and they will become big enough to attract H and He first

TIMING

• planets that start earlier will capture more hydrogen and helium gas before

the first solar wind blows the leftover gas away

The difference between gas giants and ice giants

• The solar nebula was denser closer to the center

• Jupiter and Saturn formed closer to the center

• So they got started first and were therefore able to capture H and He longer

• Uranus and Neptune formed farther out, in a thinner part of the nebula

• So they didn’t get started as soon, and didn’t have as much material to feed on

• This limited their growth…

• …and it also made their composition different from Jupiter and Saturn, with

less H and He compared to H-compounds, rock, and metal

• But there is another aspect of the differences between our jovians that can’t be

explained this way…

Density Differences

• Uranus and Neptune are denser than Saturn

• This is because they have less low density

H and He and more of the denser hydrogen

compounds

• The more low density stuff there is, the less

dense overall

• Saturn has much more H/He, so it is less

dense than Uranus

• Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune follow the

pattern that the more low density material,

the less dense overall

Density Differences

• But Jupiter is more dense than Saturn

• It doesn’t follow the pattern

• It should, because Jupiter has proportionately

more H/He than Saturn, so it ought to be less

dense than Saturn

• What’s going on?

• What’s going on is gravity

• And a stack of pillows will help explain it

Sizes of Jovian Planets

• If you stack pillows, at first the height of the stack increases one pillow thickness at a time

• But eventually, the weight of the pillows above starts to flatten those below

• And the height doesn’t increase as fast

• Same thing happens with balls of gas, like jovian planets

• Adding more gas compresses the underlying gas layers to high density

Sizes of Jovian Planets

• Greater compression is why

Jupiter is not much larger than

Saturn even though it is three

times more massive.

• And because it isn’t as much

larger as it is more massive,

it’s more dense.

• Jovian planets with even more

mass can be smaller than

Jupiter.

What are jovian planets like on the inside?

• Layers under high pressures and temperatures

• Cores (~10 Earth masses) made of hydrogen compounds, metals, and rock

• But the layers above the core are different for the different planets

•Why would this be?

•It’s because of the effect of gravity on internal pressure

• High pressure inside of Jupiter

causes the phase of hydrogen to

change with depth.

• So the layering is not from

differentiation, but from pressure

• Hydrogen acts like a metal at great

depths because its electrons move

freely.

Inside Jupiter – Contents Under Pressure

• Denser rock, metal, and

hydrogen compound

material settles to the core

(this is differentiation)

• But no one knows what the

core is like under these

extreme conditions of

temperature and pressure

Inside Jupiter – Contents Under Pressure

Comparing Jovian Interiors

• Models suggest that cores of all jovian planets have similar composition.

• But less H and He and lower pressures inside Uranus and Neptune mean no metallic hydrogen.

• There is also the possibility of diamonds!

• See here for diamonds, but see here for lowly graphite)

Jupiter’s Magnetosphere

• Jupiter’s enormous metallic hydrogen layer, created by the massive internal pressures, generates a very strong magnetic field and a gigantic magnetosphere.

• It is larger than the Sun

• Charged gases escaping Io feed the donut-shaped Io torus.

Jupiter’s Atmosphere

• Hydrogen compounds in Jupiter

form clouds.

• Different cloud layers correspond to

condensation points of different

hydrogen compounds.

• Other jovian planets have cloud

layers for similar reasons.

Jupiter’s

Colors

• Ammonium sulfide clouds (NH4SH) reflect red/brown.

• Ammonia, the highest, coldest layer, reflects white.

Saturn’s

Colors

• Saturn’s cloud layers are similar

• But because it is colder, they are deeper and more subdued

The Color of Uranus and Neptune

• Methane gas on Neptune and Uranus absorbs red light better than blue light.

• Blue light reflects off methane clouds, making those planets look blue.

Jupiter’s Great Red Spot

A storm twice as wide as Earth, observed for >180 years

But unlike typical storms on Earth, it is a high-pressure storm

You can tell this by considering the “Coriolis effect”

A ball rolled on a rotating disk appears to curve

This is due to the Coriolis effect

It makes it look like a force—the “Coriolis force”—is acting on the ball

This disk is spinning CCW

The dot doesn’t move

because we are on the disk

The Coriolis effect is an illusion…

…and the “Coriolis force” is fictitious

The ball curves on the disk, but only because the disk rotates

Not because there is a force acting on it

So there is no such thing as a “Coriolis force”—it is fictitious

If we step off of the disk

This is what we see

The ball actually moves

in a straight line

The Coriolis effect does the same thing to wind on a planet

Air streams in toward low pressure centers…

…causing CCW circulation in the northern hemisphere…

…and CW circulation in the southern hemisphere

The Great Red Spot is in the southern hemisphere of Jupiter

Since its circulation is counterclockwise, it is a high-pressure storm

Weather on Jovian Planets

• All the jovian planets have strong winds and storms.

Images taken every 10 hours over the course of 34 days by Voyager 1 as it approached Jupiter in 1979

Weather on Jovian Planets

• All the jovian planets have strong winds and storms.

• Jupiter’s atmosphere, e.g., is very active

• Cassini spacecraft movie of Jupiter atmosphere

The Moons of the Jovian Planets

These are the Galilean moons

But there are many more…

Medium and Large Moons(diameters > 300 km)

• Enough self-gravity to be spherical

• Have substantial amounts of ice

• Formed in orbit around jovian planets

• Circular orbits in same direction as planet rotation (prograde)

Small Moons(diameters < 300 km)

• Far more numerous than the medium and large moons

• Not enough gravity to be spherical: “potato-shaped”

• Many have prograde orbits, and so probably formed along with planet

• But some have retrograde orbits, evidence of capture

• Here are the Galilean moons and Mercury to scale

• Mercury is essentially geologically dead

• Why is this not a surprise…?

• Because Mercury is a small planet!

• So moons that are the same size or smaller than Mercury should be geologically dead, too

• But they’re not…

Jovian moons are surprisingly active geologically

Io’s Volcanic Activity

• Io, for example, is the most volcanically active body in the solar system

Io’s Volcanoes

• Ongoing volcanic eruptions change Io’s surface all the time

• The reason Io is so volcanic is “tidal heating”

Tidal Heating

Io is squished and stretched as it orbits Jupiter

But why is its orbit so elliptical?

Orbital

ResonancesEvery 7 days, these three

moons line up

The tugs add up over time,

making all three orbits elliptical

Io’s Volcanoes

• The tidal flexing probably melts the mantle close to the surface

• And this is the source of the magma for Io’s 400 or so active volcanoes

Europa’s Ocean: Waterworld?

Tidal Stresses Crack Europa’s Surface Ice

Tidal stresses crack Europa’s surface ice

Tidal flexing

closes crack

Tidal flexing

opens crack

Europa’s Interior Also Warmed by Tidal Heating

Ganymede

• Largest moon in the solar system

• Clear evidence of geological

activity

• And it too might have an internal

ocean

• Internal heat from tidal heating

(plus heat from radioactive decay?)

Callisto

• Heavily cratered surface

• What does that suggest?

Little active geology

• No orbital resonances

∴ no tidal heating

• But it affects Jupiter’s magnetic field

Callisto

• Heavily cratered surface

• What does that suggest?

Little active geology

• No orbital resonances

∴ no tidal heating

• But it affects Jupiter’s magnetic field

might have an internal ocean

What geological activity do we

see on Titan and other moons?

Titan’s Atmosphere

• Titan is the only moon

in the solar system

which has a thick

atmosphere.

• It consists mostly of

nitrogen with some

argon, methane, and

ethane.

Titan’s Surface

• The Huygens probe provided a first look at Titan’s surface in early 2005.

• It had liquid methane, and “rocks” made of ice.

Titan’s “Lakes”

• Radar imaging of Titan’s surface reveals dark, smooth regions that may be lakes of liquid methane.

Medium Moons of Saturn

• Almost all show evidence of past volcanism and/or tectonics.

Ongoing Activity on Enceladus

• Fountains of ice particles and water vapor from the surface of Enceladus indicate that geological activity is ongoing.

• The Cassini probe found organic compounds in the plumes of these “cryovolcanoes”

• So Enceladus is an object of astrobiological interest

Ongoing Activity on Enceladus

• Analysis of Enceladus’s gravity in 2014 suggested a subsurface ocean beneath surface ice (~25 km thick) under south pole

• Subsequent study by Cassini found that the ice shell is detached from the rocky core

Ongoing Activity on Enceladus

• Analysis of Enceladus’s gravity in 2014 suggested a subsurface ocean beneath surface ice (~25 km thick) under south pole

• Subsequent study by Cassini found that the ice shell is detached from the rocky core

• This suggests that the ocean is global

Neptune’s Moon Triton

• Similar to Pluto, but larger

• Voyager saw evidence of cryovolcanism

• Has “retrograde” orbit

• Along with its composition, this suggests it’s a captured Kuiper belt object

Why are the moons of jovian planets more geologically active than small rocky planets?

• Rock melts at high temperatures

• Rocky planets only have enough heat for geological activity if they are large.

• Ice melts at lower temperatures.

• Tidal heating can melt internal ice, driving “ice geology”.

Jovian Planet Rings

Saturn’s rings

• They are made up of numerous, tiny individual particles that are constantly colliding

• Clumps of particles form larger clumps and then break up

• The particles orbit over Saturn’s equator

• Each particle or clump obeys Kepler’s laws

• The rings are very thin

Earth-Based View

Spacecraft View

• The rings are actually made of many thin rings• Gaps separate the rings

Gap Moons

• Some small moons, like Pan shown here in the Encke Gap, create gaps within rings.

• The gravity of the moon keeps the gap clear of ring particles

• This seems odd, but when you think about it, it makes sense

Gap Moons

• The moon moves a little

slower than the inner edge, slowing those particles down

• They lose orbital energy and fall closer to the planet

• The moon moves a little

faster than the outer edge, speeding those particles up

• They gain orbital energy and move farther away

Shepherd Moons

• Some small moons “shepherd” ring particles into very thin rings in a similar way

• The gravitational influence of the moons Pandora and Prometheus (at right) keeps the F ring sharp

• A third moon, Janus is visible at upper left

Jovian Ring Systems

• All four jovian planets have ring systems

• The rings of Jupiter, Uranus, and Neptune just have smaller, darker ring particles than Saturn’s rings

Why do the jovian planets have rings?

• Ring particles are too small to survive for very long periods of time

• So there must be a continuous replacement of them

• A possible source is continuing impacts between small jovian moons

Ring Formation

• There are many small moons close-in to the jovian planets

• They could be remnants of larger moons or comets

• The larger moons or comets could have been ripped apart by straying into the “Roche tidal zone”

• Within this zone, tidal forces exceed the gravitational forces holding large or medium moons together

• Only small moons can survive there

Ring Formation

• There are many small moons close-in to the jovian planets

• They could be remnants of larger moons or comets

• The larger moons or comets could have been ripped apart by straying into the “Roche tidal zone”

• Within this zone, tidal forces exceed the gravitational forces holding large or medium moons together

• Only small moons can survive there

• During the Cassini probe’s “grand finale orbits” it will study Saturn’s rings in unprecedented detail